Danny T. Greenway v. The Buffalo Hilton Hotel, Cross-Appellee

143 F.3d 47, 8 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1265, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 8308
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1998
DocketDocket 97-7220, 97-7269
StatusPublished
Cited by285 cases

This text of 143 F.3d 47 (Danny T. Greenway v. The Buffalo Hilton Hotel, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danny T. Greenway v. The Buffalo Hilton Hotel, Cross-Appellee, 143 F.3d 47, 8 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1265, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 8308 (2d Cir. 1998).

Opinion

CARDAMONE, Circuit Judge:

On this appeal we have before us an employee who a jury found had been discriminated against by an employer on account of his disability in violation of federal and state law; that is, there was a wrong against plaintiff from the start. Yet that same employee later also failed to take such action as lay within his power to mitigate his damages flowing from the initial loss of employment. Now we are called upon to decide what duties and responsibilities were imposed upon each of the parties before us and what consequences follow from their failure to abide by applicable rules. Because the employee, after several months of temporary work, did not seek any further employment, he thereby failed to mitigate his damages and, as a result, loses entitlement to compensatory damages to which he might otherwise have been entitled. But, for the discriminatory wrong he suffered in being fired, the employee is entitled to the punitive damages awarded him by the jury, plus interest, costs, and attorney’s fees awarded him by the trial court.

The .defendant, Buffalo Hilton Hotel, employed plaintiff, Danny T. Greenway, as a *49 bartender in 1987. At the time, plaintiff had tested positive for HIV, the virus that- ultimately causes AIDS, but such information was not (and need not have been) provided at the time of hiring. He worked for five years at the hotel without incident. When in 1992 plaintiff submitted a disability insurance form to his employer, his previously undisclosed HIV-positive condition became known. Matters thereafter went downhill for Green-way at his job and he was eventually fired.

Later, he brought suit against his former employer under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the New York Human Rights Law in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York before Magistrate Judge Leslie G. Foschio. The jury found for plaintiff on the issue of liability and awarded him compensatory damages consisting of $65,000 in back pay, $50,000 for future health insurance premiums, and $324,-000 for future medication costs. It also awarded Greenway punitive damages of $1 million, for a total award of $1,439,000. Following motions by the parties, the magistrate judge reduced the back pay award by the $7,700 plaintiff earned after termination, reduced the award of punitive damages to $200,000, and to the compensatory damage award, added $10,000 in front pay. The magistrate judge thus reduced plaintiffs judgment to $637,388 plus attorney’s fees and costs, for a total award of $771,093 plus interest. Both parties appeal from different portions of the judgment entered October 23, 1996, and from the amended judgment following the trial court’s ruling on damages entered January 22,1997.

BACKGROUND

A. Facts

In July 1992 Greenway, who up until that time had been receiving favorable evaluations from his employer, took off a month from work due to fatigue and stress. His disability insurance claim form disclosed his illness to the hotel’s personnel director. Despite Hilton’s policy of maintaining the confidentiality of an employee’s health status, the personnel director informed the hotel’s general manager and its food and beverage director that Greenway was HIV-positive. Although the hotel maintains that Greenway’s immediate supervisor, Jerome Kulwicki, was not told of this condition, Greenway testified that he had first given the’ form to Mr. Kulwicki, who “looked it over” and told plaintiff to hand it to the- personnel director.

Only one month after plaintiff returned from his leave of absence, and five months after receiving a particularly favorable review in which he was assessed as having “complete mastery of all phases of [his] job,” Kulwicki gave him an average to below-average evaluation. Although in April 1992 he had been found to be polite and tolerant of pressure, by September his evaluation stated he. was “[s]ometimes tactless” and “easily irritated.”

This September 1992 evaluation was followed by four “employee disciplines.” Kul-wieki issued the first one, labeled a “friendly reminder,” on September 29, 1992. It stemmed from an incident in which plaintiff allegedly closed the bar early. Greenway stated in response that he had closed the bar an hour later than its scheduled closing time. The evaluation form stated simply that Greenway had shown “poor judgment in the way he dealt with guests of the hotel.” Greenway signed it in protest.

The second discipline, issued on October 30, 1992, resulted from an occasion when Greenway signalled a patron to sign á cheek for'her bar tab. The guest made a negative comment about the plaintiff in her Guest Comment Card and Greenway received a “written warning.” He refused to sign that evaluation form.

On January 13, 1993 Hilton suspended Greenway for a week following his third discipline. He had allegedly been rude to a manager in Hilton’s engineering department while giving notice of a problem with the heat in the employee bathroom. Greenway signed the form, but wrote Kulwicki a three-page letter describing his version of the events and informing his boss of his belief that he was being targeted for discrimination based on his health status.

In its Employee Handbook, Hilton expressed its policy that a fourth discipline “[c]onstitutes dismissal.” Thus, when Green- *50 way received his fourth discipline, one year later in February 1994, he was terminated. The reason for the fourth complaint appears to be plaintiffs failure to request or accept help during a busy shift at the bar on January 22, 1994. In a letter informing plaintiff of the action to be taken against him, Green-way’s supervisors stated that his “failure to improve” and “continued poor performance” left them “no alternative but to terminate [him] at this time.”

Hilton informed Greenway that he was eligible'to continue his health insurance coverage for at least 18 months at his own expense. Plaintiff paid the $150 premium for three months and then stopped paying, effectively terminating his coverage. After his employment at the hotel ended, Greenway worked from May to October 1994 at a temporary agency and completed a machinist retraining program by January 1996. Nevertheless, he was unable to obtain work as a machinist, and did not attempt to find a bartending job. At the time of oral argument of this appeal, he remained unemployed.

B. Prior Legal Proceedings

Greenway filed a complaint against Hilton on December 1, 1994, alleging that he had been discharged based on a disability — his HIV-positive status — in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., and the New York Human Rights Law, Executive Law § 297 (McKinney 1993 & Supp.1997). In its answer, Hilton contended that Greenway was not terminated because of his disability, but because the hotel’s written policy required such action as a result of the four disciplinary write-ups he had received.

During the trial, plaintiff elicited testimony that the employer’s so-called “policy” was not uniformly followed. For example, a waiter who had received 11 written disciplines was not fired. A busboy who received six written disciplines in a 16-month period did not lose his job.

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Bluebook (online)
143 F.3d 47, 8 Am. Disabilities Cas. (BNA) 1265, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 8308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danny-t-greenway-v-the-buffalo-hilton-hotel-cross-appellee-ca2-1998.